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A person with dark hair, wearing a white shirt and dark pants, stands in a grassy area with trees in the background. Nearby, cardboard boxes hint at ongoing efforts in mine removal. The cover of Time magazine is superimposed on the scene.

Fighting Landmines

Caroline Dijckmeester-Bins ’12 and Carl Nasman ’12 produced a video about using design to fight landmines on Time.com.

A grayscale image of a journalist looking slightly to the right. The individual has short hair and is wearing a buttoned shirt with a collar. There is partially visible text on the left side of the image, hinting at an award. The background is plain and light-colored.

Emerging Journalist Award

Pearly Tan ’14 was awarded a 2012 Emerging Journalist award by politiva.com for her piece “Of The Street,” a multimedia piece about the homeless community in Richmond.

A person wearing headphones is sitting at a desk with various audio equipment, adjusting controls on a sound mixing board. The individual appears focused on operating the equipment, possibly preparing for the Goldie Awards or working in a recording studio like Waldholz.

Goldie Awards for Waldholz

Rachel Waldholz ’13 won two Alaska Broadcasters Association Goldie Awards from her work at her summer internship. “Brewery Bandit” and “Geothermal Bathing” both won awards this year.

The image features the logo of The Washington Post, prominently displaying the publication's name in a distinctive blackletter typeface on a white background, as seen on DigiTV.

DigiTV on The Washington Post

Washingtonpost.com has published a video produced in southwest China by Digital TV and the World reporters Chris Connelly “÷12, Paulina Hartono, Christy Khoshaba “÷13 and Ted Trautman “÷12.

A small headland covered with trees juts out into the ocean under a cloudy sky. The text "KCAW Raven Radio" is prominent in the upper part of the image, with a subtle "Thank You" message beneath it. Waves gently crash on a sandy beach in the foreground.

KCAW Thank You

Rachel Waldholz ’13 recently finished her internship at KCAW radio in Sitka, Alaska. The station posted a “Thank you” to Waldholz on their website for all her hard work this summer.

A descending row of RFK statues in bright gold light.

Alumni Portrait: Lauren Capps (’12) part of RFK Award-winning team of “The Sing Sing Chronicles”

Lauren Capps (’12), was a producer on “The Sing Sing Chronicles,” a four-part docuseries by NBC News Studios and Trilogy Films that won the 2025 Domestic Television Award from Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights in May. The series is built on two decades of original investigative reporting by Dan Slepian with unprecedented access to one…

Investigative Reporting Program and alums win National Headliner Awards

UC Berkeley Journalism’s Investigative Reporting Program and seven alums are winners in the 91st National Headliner Awards, which honor the best journalism in the United States in 2024 across platforms. The Best in Show/Newspapers Award — a top honor — went to Katey Rusch (’20) and Casey Smith (’20) for the Investigative Reporting Program/San Francisco…

A man with short, blonde hair and a slight smile is wearing a purple and white checkered shirt. He is posed against a dark, plain background, resembling the portrait style often featured in Sports Illustrated.

Kevin Fixler in Sports Illustrated

Kevin Fixler ’12 had his first piece published from his editorial internship at Sports Illustrated. Read it here.

A man with short, curly hair and a slight beard looks directly into the camera. He is wearing a dark-colored collared shirt, resembling those worn by bomb experts in Thailand, and the background is dark and out of focus.

Thailand Bomb Expert

A piece by Mark Oltmanns ’12 on a bomb expert in a volatile region of southern Thailand was published on Globalpost.com.

A green circular icon featuring a simple white molecular structure with three connected nodes, resembling a small network of spheres and lines. Two smaller connected nodes are on the left, and one larger isolated node is on the right—perfect for students exploring J-School projects.

WaPo Labs visits J-School, recognizes students

The digital arm of the Washington Post visited the J-School to talk about the future of journalism.